Saturday, April 18, 2026

Weekend Open Thread

25 comments:

  1. 'Hola, ¿cΓ³mo estΓ‘n? ¡Bienvenidos a nuestro fin de semana!'πŸ˜‰

    CHASING MATTHEW NICHOLS (2026, CANADA, THEATER) and ChaO ('26, JAPAN, THEATER) were the only theatrical features I took a chance on during another week of dullsville new releases. "CMT" starts as a missing person documentary about a grown-up sister (Miranda MacDougall) trying to piece together what happened when his brother and a best friend disappeared from Vancouver Island 20 years prior. I was honestly fooled and for the first third l thought l wondered into a real doc. Then little by little it becomes a found footage "Blair Witch Project" clone, but a classy one (Christine Willes steals the movie as a veteran detective withholding the truth) that keeps it together until the very end when... damn it, it chooses genre theatrics over the subtlety it displayed for 90% of its running time to end the show. Worth a streaming view on a lazy weekend.🫀

    "ChaO" imagines an anime world where humans and merpeople (male and female) co-exist above water, then switches to a feature-length flashback of the first marriage between a human (Oji Suzuka's Stefan) and a mermaid (Ana Yamada's ChaO) as told by an older/wiser Stefan to an eager-for-a-scoop young journalist. Inhibiting that netherworld between 'PG' and 'PG-13,' "ChaO" alternates between silly interspecies newlywed disputes and existential human crisis. The flashback to how Stefan lost his parents in a fishing boat accident when he was a kid is brutal (not shown, just implied), and when it chooses to go for spectacle "ChaO" looks stunning despite an art style different from traditional anime form. Worth a look.πŸ™‚

    Had never even heard of Nicolas Winding Refn's BRONSON (2008, UK/DENMARK, AMAZON RENTAL) until it was picked for group viewing on Discord's JURY 4.0. A then-up-and-coming Tom Hardy exudes animal magnetism as Michael Peterson, nicknamed 'Charles Bronson,' who has spent almost every day since 1974 in British solitary confinement for violent/destructive behavior. Since this is an early Refn work the naked cage brawlings, f*c*s face rubbing and bloody impalings Bronson endures in prison are done with stylish music in slow-motion for maximum artistic impact. You can't convince me now that Todd Phillips didn't see this when he made his two "Joker" movies, which Tom Hardy crushes in a playful, smiling and menacing host-within-his-mind theatrical presentation. Never want to see "Bronson" again, but glad my visitation rights aren't revoked.🫣😬

    Back in October of last year l watched Joel Schumacher's FLATLINERS (1990, BLU-RAY) for Scary Movie Month. This week l unpacked the many new-in-2022 Arrow bonus features/commentary that, honestly, were a bigger attraction to me than the main feature. Most enjoyable was seeing Jan de Bont interviewed, l miss his better directed films (not "Speed 2" or the 2nd Angelina Jolie "Tomb Raider" flick).πŸ€“πŸ‘

    Felt the need to digest movie cheese (don't ask), so l watched ALIEN APOCALYPSE (2005, TUBI) starring Bruce Campbell and RenΓ©e O'Connor. A Sci-Fi Channel original movie when initially released, it's "Planet of the Apes" meets "Battlefield Earth" with badly-rendered CG insects enslaving the human race so they can steal our... wood??!! πŸ˜… Shot in Bulgaria (hence why most extras/supporting characters are badly dubbed), "AA" would be unbearable if Bruce wasn't keeping it alive with his Chuck Heston-worthy assholery. Deep into the story John Carpenter regular Peter Jason shows up as the 'President' every enslaved human wants to lead the rebellion against the aliens ('The President Lives!'). But since Jason was clearly on set for only one day, it falls on Bruce's DOCTOR Ivan Hood to pull an "Army of Darkness" siege on an S-Mart budget (CG rockets). A harmless and cheesy-as-hell way to kill two hours.πŸ˜‡πŸ«‘

    Last and least, JACK-O (1995, AMC+) is a cheesy horror flick co-written (but not directed) by Fred Olen Ray... 'nuff said. Linnea Quigley gets top billing for an out-of-nowhere shower scene. 😳 Is it June already? πŸ˜…

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Bronson is great. Weirdly unknown considering Tom Hardy star status

      Delete
    2. Hardy carries the film and is the only reason to watch it. Refn's style wouldn't be completely dialed until "Drive" a few years later, so his few cracks at a Mise-en-scΓ¨ne in "Bronson" are secondary to Tom's disarming smile, killer stache and imposing (often completely nude) screen presence. 😲😱πŸ₯Ή

      Delete
  2. Red State (2011): In the Kevin Smith filmography, this is an odd one. Not because the movie is that weird, but because it's doesn't fit anywhere. Well, maybe if you put it next to Dogma, but even then. And somehow it still retains some of the Smith's habits, mainly the long-winded monologues. I personally liked the ending, I always thought it was a clever twist. Though Smith had to do his thing and insert weed in there, but it does allow him to make a small and funny joke (I won't spoil it for those who haven't seen it).

    Red Sonja (1985): I swear I didn't watch it on the same night as Red State on purpose, I was just very happy to get it (thanks JM for making me spend money). Another bad movie I thoroughly enjoy, and it does scratch that sword & sorcery itch I've had for a while. The transfer is definitely better than the previous Studio Canal 4k.

    Life of Brian (1979): Criterion finally release a 4k version of the film. This is arguably the best Monty Python movie: bigger budget, better story, better cinematography, etc. (my favorite is Holy Grail). Now we finally get to see Graham Chapman's dick in glorious HDR. Still a masterpiece.

    The Devils Wears Prada (2006): With the sequel coming soon, it was time for a rewatch (not because of Adam's 2k Replay, it was just good timing). Still a fun movie, Stanley Tucci is the best. Can't wait to see how they're gonna force all of those pretty (and now, old) people together.

    Poseidon (2006): Look, I won't pretend this is a good movie, but we all love a decent disaster movie, remake or not. Keep character development to a minimum, d3ath and destruction to a maximum. And no epilogue; survivors get out, roll credits. The 4k looks great, obviously, but what really tipped the scale for me, is the video essay by the great Cereal at Midnight's Heath Holland (ex FTM collaborator). Just that video is worth the price of admission. And the movie's just 98 minutes, with credits.

    Red Planet (2000): Hey, another 'red' movie, but also another Arrow 4k with a Mr Holland video essay, and a link to Prada with Simon Baker. There's a lot of stuff happening; crash landing, exploding bugs, rogue robot, and more. I won't pretend it's good, it's mostly generic 2000 sci-fi stuff (with a PG rating), but I'm a simple man; show me space, a ship with a bunch of dumbasses, some shenanigans, and I'm hooked. Is it just me, or Tom Sizemore doesn't belong in a sci-fi movie? Actually, I think most of the cast shouldn't be in sci-fi.

    Now leave me alone, Hades II just dropped on PS5 😎😜

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Rule of thumb for 4K enthusiasts: 9 out of 10 times, an Arrow remaster/transfer beats a competing boutique label's remaster for the same title. πŸ˜ƒ And after "Red State" and "Red Sonja," no rewatch of Bruce Willis' "Red" series? Disappointing. πŸ™„πŸ€€

      That quote ('... see Graham Chapman's dick in glorious HDR!") should be on the back of the Criterion 4K box for "Holy Grail." πŸ˜‚πŸ₯Ά

      Delete
    2. I watched Red Dawn a few weeks ago though

      Delete
    3. '84 original or the '12 remake? πŸ™ƒπŸ™‚

      Delete
    4. About Red Sonja, when I bought the Studio Canal version, the Arrow disc was not announced yet. I hate waiting 'just in case', so it cost me a lot of money over the years 😎

      Delete
    5. Red Dawn original, obviously. Who do you think I am?

      Delete
    6. I'm sure Arrow delayed its "Red Sonya" 4K until after it released the Arnold "Conan" movies in 4K so that fans of the latter would feel the urge to buy the former to complete the unofficial trilogy. Sneaky Arrow. πŸ€¨πŸ™„

      Delete
  3. BENEATH THE PLANET OF THE APES (1970)
    Who needs apes when you’ve got telepathic mutants?

    BRONSON (2008)
    A mega-violent prison movie that’s filmed all artsy. Reminded me a lot of A Clockwork Orange. A real oddity, but I guess I’m glad I saw it.

    THE WIZARD OF OZ (1939)
    “She’s not only merely dead, she’s really most sincerely dead.”

    SUPERMAN THE MOVIE (1978)
    Richard Donner goodness!

    AUSTIN POWERS: THE SPY WHO SHAGGED ME (1999)
    This is the one that was a mega-event at the theater. But while it does have some funny bits, the cracks are showing. It repeats a lot of the jokes/memes from the first one, frustratingly.

    LABYRINTH (1986)
    Way down in the underground, whoa-oh, whoa-oh, OH!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. What's going on, why is everybody watching Bronson all of a sudden?

      Delete
    2. "Bronson" was the chosen-by-members weekly watchalong on Discord (Wednesdays at 8:30pm) for JURY ROOM 4.0, a private Discord chatroom for forum refugees of the now-defunct dvdverdict.com website (where one Patrick Bromley used to be a reviewer/contributor in the 2000's and early 2010's). You're welcome to join in and post/watch along the feature, all you need is to reply to an invite from a JR 4.0 member and have an active Discord account. πŸ™ƒπŸ™‚

      Delete
    3. That explains a lot. I'll look into it.

      Delete
  4. Finally picked up Arrow's 4k of Creepshow 2, mostly for "The Raft" segment. The Raft was the first movie that truly terrified me. I watched it when I was maybe 7 or 8 and I was afraid to sleep by the edge of my bed for months! But it was also the movie that cemented my love of horror movies. Nothing since has scared me like The Raft. The 4k transfer looks beautiful, honestly better than Creepshow 2 probably deserves, but I'm happy about it .

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. How's the comic book for the unfilmed 4th segment? That Arrow extra is the only thing tempting me to buy the too-pricey "Creepshow 2" 4K. 🫀🧐

      Delete
    2. I personally think it was fun. It would be better if it was filmed, it's full of zombies and head rolling. The practical effects would've been cool

      Delete
    3. Sounds like it would have been too expensive/impossible to do in 1987 with their small budget. πŸ€” l like the sequel, but it feels wrong to buy it on 4K before getting the OG "Creepshow" movie first. There's a sale at a local Barnes & Noble where l can get the prequel (Shout! Factory version) in 4K for less than $21. Tempted, but not sure... πŸ™„πŸ˜¬

      Delete
    4. Listen to the voices, buy it.

      It's weird to get 2 before 1, but you'll get there.

      Do it

      Delete
    5. But l just blew an obscene (for me) amount of $$$ buying Junesploitation 4K reinforcements at that same store! πŸ₯΅ And this sale is only in store, not online (where the high discounts don't apply). I have to eat, sleep, live... "Creepshow"4K will push me over the top. Must...resist... Kunider temptation!!! 🫣πŸ€₯

      Delete
    6. Eating is for the weak.

      Not to pile on, often reprints of a movie don't come with the booklet (in this case, would be the comic). So....

      Delete
    7. Arrow, Indicator and Radiance do away with booklets/print extras after the initial run sells out. That's how l missed on Arrow's "Dark City" 4K, waiting for a sale that came months too late. 😒😭 Kino Lorber and Shout!/Scream! Factory don't have booklets, but a 2nd BD disc comes standard with the 4K disc (the first three boutique labels are 4K disc only for top price! 😑😩). "Creepshow" is Shout!, so no booklet. I'll wait it out. πŸ˜“πŸ«€

      Delete
    8. Creepshow is Shout

      Creepshow 2 is Arrow

      😁😎

      Delete
    9. Oh, and Tales From the Dark Side, the unofficial part 3, is Shout 😁

      Delete
    10. But I'm poor. I need money for rent, laundry, ice cream! 🍦πŸ₯΅

      Delete